Sunday, December 16, 2018

Reading and Listening Again - Portishead and Crip Times for Liz Crow's Figures project




I haven't been keeping at it, but the original reason for this blog was to find a permanent place for posts I used to make on Facebook about strange juxtapositions between books and music that came to me while I was simultaneously reading and listening to music. Since then, it's become mostly a place to blog about reading challenges and readathons, though I try to give my posts some musical accompaniment.

Today, I'm reading Robert McRuer's intellectually stimulating and politically motivating book, Crip Times: Disability, Globalization and Resistance for one of the categories in the 2018 academic reading challenge. On p. 208, he makes the connection between the band Portishead and their namesake, Portishead in North Somerset where Liz Crow completed sculpture/performance project, Figures in 2015. For the project, Crow spent 11 days at the river, using the mud to make small clay figures. She then toured with the figures for five days, along with stories of 650 disabled people affected by austerity policies. On the project's final day, she burned the figures in a cairn, and then crushed them into dust, while reading the stories of individuals aloud, a process that lasted six hours. Finally, she scattered the ashes off the coast of Portishead.

McRuer argues that the first lines of Portishead's song "Cowboys" could be a comment on the Blaire/Cameron (Blameron) govt. policies of austerity against which Crow's art was a protest:

Did you feel us tales of deceit
Conceal the tongues who need to speak
Subtle lies and a soiled coin
The truth is told, the deal is done. 


I could add, after reading just a few of the the devastating stories that make up Crow's Figures series, that they also resonate strongly with Portishead's song "Roads" which was playing on my computer when I began reading these narratives of lives "at the sharp end of austerity"

How can it feel this wrong?

This is just one of the stories behind the figures:

48-year old Paul was part of a wave of young Scottish authors who rose to international prominence in the 1990s. After he killed himself, his publisher wrote to Chancellor George Osborne, “I thought I would let you know that Paul took his own life. He didn’t leave a note but he laid out two letters on his table. One was notifying him that his Housing Benefit had been stopped. The other was notifying him that his Incapacity Benefit had been stopped. The reason I’m writing is just so you know the human cost of attacking those on benefits.




Thursday, December 6, 2018

the Fifth Annual Academic Reading Challenge Starts Jan 1, 2019


Welcome reading friends!

Read below to find out the categories for next year's challenge. 


What it is and who it is for: 
This is a challenge for academics who feel that their reading has become over-specialized and possibly joyless, who want to read more literature for pleasure, who want to broaden the way they approach their own research and teaching, who like to talk about reading with each other, who are interested in interdisciplinary reading, and who want to support their friends and colleagues by reading their books. You don’t have to be a professor to do the challenge. Maybe you graduated from school but you miss reading academic books.  The challenge runs for a year and emphasizes reading across academic disciplines. If you are a professional academic or public intellectual outside the university, this challenge is meant to give you a structure for reading outside your area of specialization - including reading literature - and to provide a space to talk with others about the experience. If you are a general reader who likes reading serious works of non-fiction, this challenge is also for you. It's a structure that you can use to read works of the type that you might not have encountered since you were a student. 
    This is the fifth year I've organized this challenge, and you can read about it in an essay I wrote “Read Another Book, Repeat When Necessary” that’s included in the new essay collection, Reversing the Cult of Speed in Higher Education  edited by Jonathan Lee Chambers and Stephanie Gearhart. The challenge categories are crowd-sourced by the challenge participants in November of the year before the challenge starts.  
 
You can 


Like us on facebook
  There's also a facebook group you can join by permission.
follow the challenge on twitter
use hashtag #AcademicReadingChallenge to share your own updates on the challenge




Rules
The challenge starts on January 1, 2019 at midnight and goes till Dec. 31, 2019. There are a total of 15 regular categories in the challenge with three “extra credit” categories for over-achievers.  There are also double-points available in a few categories.

 The academic books must be at least 175 pages long

Novels must be at least 200 pages long

Books of poetry or special issues of journals must be at least 100 pp. long

One book can be a children's or YA book.

To decide whether a book is academic, look for something published by a university press.

Any book on the list, except where specified otherwise, can be a novel or a complete journal issue as long as it fits the general category

Books can only count for one category, but you can switch them from one category to the other before you’re done if you like.  (In other words, you can't count a book by your friend who wrote about fascism for both the fascism and "by a friend" categories.)

Only one book can be something you’ve read before

Audiobooks are fine as long as they are unabridged and the print edition is at least 200 pages long.

Books must be started no earlier than midnight 1/1/19 and finished no later midnight 12/31/2019
Points: This isn't a competition, but if you're counting…

Total possible points for 1-15 without "double-point bonuses" - 200. 

If you do all the double-point bonuses and do extra-credit categories, you can get a maximum of 240 points.



And NOW….the Categories

1) Book by a friend or colleague 10 points
2) Book about music 10 points
3) Book about fascism  10  points
4) Book written before 1900 20  points
5) Book about a commodity 10 points
6) Book by a living poet 20 points
7) Historical novel 10 points
8)  Book of critical university studies 20 points
9)  Book about a country you don't normally read about 10 points
10) Book originally written in a non-European language 20 points
11) Book you first heard about on a podcast, radio, or social media 10 points
12) Book about a profession you'll never have, but always wish you did  20 points
13) Book that won an award in your field (any time period) 10 points
14) Book you'd forgotten you own (double points if you bought it twice) 10 points
15) A book about aging or with a protagonist over 60 10 points

Extra Credit:
16)  Extra Credit: The Struggle Continues! (you define the struggle) 10 points
17) Extra Extra credit: Book related to your teaching or research but a different discipline from yours 10 points
18) Super Duper Extra Credit: A book you discovered in the footnotes of another book 10 points

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Bout of Books 23 - Day 7

Today's Bout of Books challenge - reassess the week's goals and decide whether I can stretch them.

So far, I've read 410 pages this week, and didn't finish a single book, but instead read bits of several.

So my stretch goal is to stay up another hour or so and finish at least one.  I'm almost done with two: Butler's Dawn and Ron Beiner, Dangerous Minds: Nietzsche, Heidegger and the Return of the Far Right an essay reconsidering the influence of Nietzsche and Heidegger in contemporary philosophy in light of the rise of the alt-right.

At the moment though, I'm listening to the last chapter of the audiobook of Sharp Objects, which I had listened to when the book first came out, but which explains a lot more than the ending of the TV show.  Although I did enjoy what the show did to create a creepy Southern Gothic atmosphere,  the book was better.


and here's your music

Saturday, August 25, 2018

Bout of Books update Days 5 & 6


Yesterday I re-read about half of Octavia Butler's Dawn, which we'll be discussing in the SF book club on Monday.  This has been a heavy couple of Science-Fiction weeks.  Last weekend was WorldCon. Then we have our local SF book club, to be followed soon after by book club night at the movies to see 2001: Space Odyssey, and then it's Dragon Con.



My current academic reading is still pretty other-worldly. I am continuing to read about the eerily familiar tactics of the Lyndon LaRouche cult. These people have been "post-truth" left/right conspiracy wackos, both obsessed with the deep-state and partnering with various policing and state intelligence services to attack their enemies for decades. 


Page count so far: 270

Challenge, Day 6: for a book I learned about from another bout-of-bookser, I just added Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata to my Goodreads TBR. This one looks like fun.

Challenge Day 5 - I started this blog as a way to do music-reading mash-ups, but I didn't post yesterday because I couldn't think of any songs that reminded me of books. I'm more likely to think of a song because I'm reading a book than anything else.  So, since I'm a day late on this one anyway, here goes; I'm going to try to keep with the 'Con theme by choosing SF/F books that I've enjoyed this year.

Book: Jeff VanderMeer, Borne + The Talking Heads, "Stay Up Late". Borne doesn't sleep, he's not a plaything, but he's kind of like a baby, and he does stay up all night.

Book: Edgar Cantero, Meddling Kids + Split Enz,"I Got You".  I chose this one because pretty far into the book, people still don't know why sometimes they get frightened.


Book: Martha Wells,  All Systems Red    + the Buggles "Video Killed the Radio Star" . Because Murderbot loves her shows.


Thursday, August 23, 2018

Bout of Books Days 3 & 4

I knew it would happen: It's the second week of classes where I teach, so this is not my best reading time. I've had to prioritize re-reading things I'm teaching. That means I've been dipping back into Manoush Zomorodi's Bored and Brilliant, which I've assigned to my MA thesis students as a way to detach from social media and give themselves more time for "deep work." I highly, highly recommend this book, which in addition to being useful, actually does a good job summarizing more scholarly work on the impact of social media on attention, work and personal relationships.

Both this morning and yesterday, I spent the first part of the day reading Dennis King's Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism. While this book is relatively old, it covers a subject that is unfortunately relevant again as LaRouche-ism found a new home in Post-Soviet Russia, and elsewhere through the reign of "Post-Truth."  Remember those weird signs at the Obama healthcare town halls back in 2009? They were often being carried by LaRouchies.

Yesterday afternoon, I read a chunk of another book about earlier right wing politics, Nicole Hemmer's Messengers of the Right, which describes right wing media efforts going back to the 1950s, including many people I'd never heard of before. It's definitely worth reading for anyone interested in politics and media history. Much of what we think was new in the 1990s - such as right wing talk radio - had roots going back to much earlier media networks. This book is one of a few books going back to find linkages between the very far right and so-called "moderate" right prior to the rise of Reagan, and is similar to Edward Miller's excellent book on the Dallas GOP: Nut Country

In the evenings, I've been reading Edgar Canero's Meddling Kids which is so far not too horrifying, and pretty amusing. We'll see how dark it gets.

total pages read so far: about 140, I'd guess.

Day 4 Challenge: Book Trip


If I followed these books, I'd start in New York City, head to London,  go on to the Faroe Islands, then head for Berlin, followed by Sarajevo, and on to Japan before heading back to New York - this time in Queens.
Here's my   Book Trip Map

I'm doing the BOB photo challenge updates at rebnhill on instagram if you want to see them.


Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Bout of Books 23 Days 1 & 2

I just spent a long weekend thinking and talking about books because I went to WorldCon (The World Science Fiction Convention). While there, I accumulated way more books than was probably good for me. Maybe later this week, I'll post a loot picture.

On the plane back to Georgia on Monday, I read about half of Spider Robinson's Time Travellers Strictly Cash, which I had picked up at a used and rare book exhibit at the convention with the intention of getting a signature from Robinson before I left. I was charmed and moved by his performance at the Friday night WorldCon music event, and curious about Callahan's Saloon, which was the official name of the WorldCon bar/lounge where I wound up watching the Hugo Simulcast. I didn't get Robinson's signature because my schedule became too full, but I did enjoy reading his book and will likely finish it tonight if I can tear myself away from the real life crime-drama of American politics. It was a good choice for my flight, although I lost a lot of reading time to the woman sitting next to me who kept engaging me in conversation, and later on, I switched to an audiobook for a while when the turbulence got too unruly for me. Robinson represents that moment in SF in the late 70s and early 80s when I was first reading it, with all the good and bad elements of male hippie-dom and the sexual revolution of the era. Of what I read, I probably most enjoyed the story  "Dog Day Evening," full of ridiculous puns and good feeling. I also enjoyed what some reviewers describe as "filler"- Robinson's personal comments about various legendary SF publishers and writers, as well as some of his book reviews, which are witty, and in some cases, scathing.


Today, Tuesday, I got almost no reading done at all during the day, which seemed unlikely since I had a lot of catching up to do in the office.

BoB Page count so far: 93


And since this is a reading and listening blog, here's Spider Robinson singing at World Con this past weekend: 

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Bout of Books 23- August 20-26, 2018. Oh, All Right I'm In!


On August 20th, the 23rd Bout of Books Readathon is starting, and runs through August 26th. I'll be partially traveling, and partially teaching the first weeks of the semester, but maybe I'll find some time for reading this time. "What is bout of books?"  you ask.

In the words of the organizers:

 The Bout of Books read-a-thon is organized by Amanda Shofner and Kelly Rubidoux Apple. It is a week long read-a-thon that begins 12:01 am Monday, August 20th and runs through Sunday, August 26th in whatever time zone you are in. Bout of Books is low-pressure. There are challenges, giveaways, and a grand prize, but all of these are completely optional. For all Bout of Books 23 information and updates, be sure to visit the Bout of Books blog 


 I've now done this readathon twice, and each time, I've gotten a little more savvy about how the social media challenge aspect of how the readathon works.  My biggest problem has been spending too much time writing blog posts instead of reading. 

This time, I'll try to be short but sweet with my check-ins. Since I know I probably won't be getting a lot of serious research done during the first weeks of school, I'm going to use the challenge to do some reading for the annual academic reading challenge that I run. Well, what's that you ask? Here's our facebook group



Monday, July 23, 2018

2 Days later - 24in48 wrap up


Another July, another 24-in-48 readathon. The more you do it, the easier it gets. This year I read about 860 pages and listened to 5 hours of an audiobook. I had thought I wasn't going to make it because on Saturday, we had friends over to play a game and eat dinner and wound up hanging out for about 5 hours.  By the time I was ready for bed, I'd only read for 9 and 1/2 hours, so it wasn't looking good for me. However, I then woke up in the middle of the night and couldn't get back to sleep for a really long time. Usually I don't treat insomnia as a benefit, but this time, I got a lot of reading done.

Books finished
Sue Burke, Semiosis - which we'll be discussing in my local book club tonight. I really enjoyed this book, and found it similar to work by Ursula LeGuin and Octavia Butler, because it challenged basic ideas about human superiority. Very thought-provoking.

Yassin El-Haj Saleh, The Impossible Revolution. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in contemporary politics in the Middle-East. Saleh gives an analysis of various parties in the Syrian opposition, as well as closing with a detailed analysis of the Assad regime as a neo-Sultanic state. It's beautifully written and would work well for a general audience without much knowledge of Syria.

Books started, but not finished: 
Imbolo Mbue, Behold the Dreamers . (read about 220 pages of this book) The story of two families: the Jongas and the Edwards. Jende Jonga and his wife work for the wealthy couple, Cindy and Clark Edwards, while Edwards works at Lehman Brothers on the eve of the 2008 financial crash. It may be a bit heavy-handed, but it's fast paced and the characters are believable. I hit the 24 hour mark before i was finished and I still read more before I finally fell asleep.

Michael Finkel, True Story: Murder, Memoir, Mea-Culpa I listened to this for about 5 hours while working out and doing basic chores around the house. I believe that I'm still in for some surprises in part two, so I'm looking forward to finishing it with a week's worth of commutes.

Ben McIntyre, Agent Zigzag (read 50 pages) This was my late-night-read-on-the-e-reader-so-as-not-to-wake-the-husband book. I've wanted to read something by McInture for a long time, though I didn't get very far into it. So far, it's an interesting character study of a British con-artist and bank-robber who stumbled into being a Nazi spy for personal gain.






and that's it. See you next time. 

Friday, July 20, 2018

A year later - my third 24in48 Readathon TBR

It was a year ago that I did my first 24in48 readathon and now I'm back for the third time. The 24in48 is the readathon of readathons for me- because it means reading for 24 hours in two days. This time,  I'm not planning to read any books directly related to either teaching or research. Finally, instead of using the weekend to jump-start a paper, or plan the syllabus before the semester starts as I've done in the past, I'm ready to spend two days mostly reading fiction. I hope it will be a welcome relief from panicked news-reading that I've been doing all week. It won't all be escapism, however. I do hope to read Yassin Al-Haj Saleh's book about the Syrian revolution, The Impossible Revolution, which has been on my TBR pile for months.


Sunday, May 20, 2018

Bout of Books Day 7 Update

I've managed to read more during this Bout of Books so far than in the previous year, mostly by just trying to read for a bit more than I usually would in any given day. It certainly helped that the school year is over. I found it hard to concentrate on reading books when there were such horrible events this week, including the Israeli massacre of protesters in Gaza and the dreadful school shooting in Texas. It seems strange to be preoccupied with counting pages during such a week,and I spent a lot of time reading news articles and talking to people. Over the course of the week, I read about 700 pages, but I wasn't counting carefully.

  For my stretch goal, I'd like to read 100 more pages before the day is done, but that seems unrealistic, I'll probably just wind up listening to an audiobook while I get ready to go back to work on Monday.
  5/21 UPDATE: I met my stretch goal by reading another 100 pages in Brothers of the Gun

  This week's reading:
Books Finished:
Karen Russell, Swamplandia!
Win McCormack, Chronicles of Rajneesh. 
3 issues of the new radical comic, Calexit  - which my friendly comic-seller had recommended to me when it first started up. What a blast!  and with informative interviews with activists in the back of each issue.
  Iris Tillman,   All This Happened Long Ago -It Happens Now. - my mother's beautiful and long-awaited poetry chapbook about our family history which just came out last week.

Books Started: 
 David Neiwert's Alt-America: The Rise of the Radical Right in the Age of Trump, (110 pp and still going)
 Marwan Hisham and Molly Crabapple's Brothers of the Gun.  (185 pages)

And the Rest: 
I did not read close to as many pages of Adam Tooze's book, Wages of Destruction as I had planned to. Nor did I read any bit of the Graham Greene bio I had started reading in late April.
I also listened to a  4 hours of James Comey's memoir during carpool to and from work this week, and also listened to a few hours of Nick Stone's The Verdict.


Favorite of the week is definitely Brothers of the Gun.

In its honor, here's some music by the singer Fairouz, who is mentioned in the book's first chapters:





Saturday, May 19, 2018

Bout of Books 22 Day 6 Update


Yesterday, I spent some time thinking about books, went to both the bookstore and the comics store. Earlier in the day, I read a little bit of Adam Tooze, this chapter being about steel rationing and the conflict between rearmament goals and general problems with balance of payments, and then began a section about the beginning of aggression against Austria and Czechoslovakia.

I also picked up Marwan Hisham and Molly Crabapple's Brothers of the Gun, which just came out. Here's a video of Crabapple discussing the book, a joint project with Hisham, who was based in Raqqa when they first were talking.



Today I read a bit of Brothers of the Gun in the morning, then shifted to David Neiwert's Alt-America which has been on my TBR for quite a while now. If you're thinking about how to prioritize reading about the far right, Neiwert's book goes back to the militia movement of the 1990s in order to understand the roots of Trumpism in a long-building conspiracist culture based on various alternative media.
 At the end of the day, I decided to finally read the comic Calexit, a complex narrative about what might happen if California had seceded and then devolved into a civil war. The comic also includes interviews with activists and radical writers in the back pages. It's definitely not a predicable story line so far, and I'm looking forward to reading the next issues.  Like this guy, interviewed about the recent Free Comic Book Day, I'm really enjoying the radical trends in comic writing during the last several years.

For today's challenge, I don't have a lot to say. I enjoy the Bout of Books readathon. I don't know if I have favorite moments so much, but I generally enjoy the opportunity to read about what other people are doing by checking their blogs or seeing their tweets and bookish photos on instagram.


Since I'm reading comics right now, today's reading and listening is Art Brut's "DC Comics and Chocolate Milkshakes" (because some things will always be great).


Friday, May 18, 2018

Bout of Books 22 - Day Five


 I crept slowly through 20 pages in Adam Tooze, but finished Win McCormack's Rajneesh Chronicles this morning. Today, after reading for an hour or two, and doing the usual email and admin work, I managed to spend some time in the garden and made a trip to the bookstore and the comic store. Tonight, I'm planning to dive into Brothers of the Gun by Marawn Hisham and Molly Crabapple.

Today's challenge from the BoB peeps is all about space, which explains the Kid Koala clip. I was very lucky to attend his Satellite turntable orchestra show at Big Ears back in March.


Onto the challenge - A space scavenger hunt from Liz at https://travelinretrospect.com/, who made up this challenge for the Bout of Books crew. This was a scavenger hunt through my recent and distant memories...

Mercury: favorite short story/novella: Edith Wharton, False Dawn from the Old New York collection
 I read this brilliant collection of short stories by Edith Wharton soon after I finished graduate school and moved to New York City. I always was looking for a way to teach the short story "False Dawn" which represents an American's travels in Europe and his interest in "unfashionable" art that disappoints his parents.

Venus: Favorite book with female protagonist: Toni Morrison, Beloved
   Still one of the best novels of all time - capturing the ghostly presence of slavery, the dark heart of American history. I read this in the summer after I graduated from college, sweating on a bedroll in a shared apartment in the Hamptons.

Earth - favorite book with nature/nature word in the title: Jon Krakauer, Into Thin Air
  It's not a great work of literature, I suppose, but it tells an important story about tourism, exploitation, money, and human stupidity in the face of nature. It is absolutely gripping. I read the entire thing on a train trip from Minneapolis to Philadelphia.

Mars: Favorite book with a red cover: Viet Thanh Nguyen, The Sympathizer
   This book won the Pulitzer prize in 2016 and was one of the few books that so deserved prizes. A Vietnamese view of America and Imperial power as told from multiple locations. I've read it twice since it came out, and am impressed at how well it stands multiple readings. It's lyrical, smart, political, and works both as a literary work and a "thriller."

Jupiter: Favorite tome over 500 pages: Marcel Proust, Remembrance of Things Past
   I dreamily read large chunks of the first volume of the Pleiade edition when I was in highschool, which is a great time to read this book, though I think I might not finish all the volumes until I manage to go on sabbatical or retire.

Saturn: Favorite book with circle or ring on the cover/in the title: Mary McCarthy, The Group
My mother had recommended this book about female friendships to me when I was in middle school, and I did find it a completely memorable experience, though I was a bit mystified by the sexual relationships.

Uranus: Favorite book set in winter: Nikolai Gogol, The Overcoat and Other Stories
   I read this book for a class on "Russian literature in the Gogolian tradition" when I was in college. The entire course was like a walk on the Nevksy Prospekt in the wet snow  - the atmosphere becoming my central memory of the multiple dark, fantastical books I read in one spring semester in Connecticut.


Neptune: Favorite book set at sea, on a boat or under water:
Herman Melville, Moby Dick
   I read this book when I lived in Sag Harbor, the old whaling town where I lived for six months immediately after graduating from college. It's an obvious and wonderful choice.

Pluto: Favorite book featuring a dog or with a dog on the cover: Jesmyn Ward, Salvage the Bones  I read this one quite recently - a wrenching tale where the dog is a character on equal footing with humans, in a way that resonates with some recent scholarly work on human-animal relationships.

Moon: Favorite book set anywhere other than Earth: Ursula LeGuin, Wizard of Earthsea - read over 30 years ago, and only now a dim and pleasurable memory, but  I'm planning to read it again soon.  Another wonderful not-earth book by LeGuin is The Dispossessed which mixes social commentary and narrative power in a way that is rarely achieved.

Sun: Favorite book set in summer: L.P. Hartley, The Go-Between This whole book is about what summer is for children - endless, sweaty, golden, mysterious, sexual. 

Space: Favorite book set in space: Octavia Butler, Dawn  Not your average book about waking up on an alien spacecraft. A serious book about what it means to be human and life on earth.

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Bout of Books Day Four

Yesterday was a pretty productive reading day for me. I finished Swamplandia! and discussed it with my book-club crew, and read more of the Rajneesh Chronicles as well.  Today, having finished an administrative task that took up more time than it should have, I'm now back to serious research reading, which means Adam Tooze again. I'd left off around p. 235.


For my read alike, since yesterday's "precious"  was Marx's Capital, I chose Harry Braverman's Labor and Monopoly Capital:the Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century.  This amazing book about Taylorism and the deskilling of work continues to be relevant, and now applies to even the "knowledge professions" because of the growth of information technology.





For fiction, I don't know why...maybe it's that summer feeling, but I chose to match fans of Emma Straub's Brooklyn novel, Modern Lovers, which centers around old college band mates with Jane Smiley's earlier NYC novel, Duplicate Keys a quasi-literary mystery that also features a rock band in Manhattan.  I read it almost twenty years ago and really loved it. I might need to read it again if I have time. I am a sucker for books about tight-knit groups of friends in cities, so if anyone's reading this and has suggestions, please leave em in the comments.


Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Bout of Books Day 3 update

I started off on Tuesday morning with a big section of Win McCormack's The Rajneesh Chronicles but soon got too busy at the office to do much reading until later in the day, when I dived back into Swamplandia! which we'll be discussing tonight in the A Capella Under Cover Book Club. Last week, I had almost decided not to finish this one, which seems to fall too much into the stereotypical "eccentric Southern family" narrative for me, especially with all the ghost stuff, but the second half of the book has been a bit more compelling.

To show off my Precious for today's challenge, I'll go with a classic choice.



via GIPHY

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

Bout of Books Day 2 update

Well, well, well. It really is much better to do Bout of Books when I'm not teaching. Today's theme is finding a book from the year when you were born. As this blog's purpose is to bring music and reading together, here's my favorite birth year-related song.




Yesterday, despite not being preoccupied with work, I was consumed by terrible events in Israel/Palestine.  For a relevant reading recommendation, it's hard to do better than Edward Said.

Let's get to the update:
Yesterday, I read chunks of Adam Tooze, Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy. The chapters I read yesterday concerned the NSDAP's focus on the peasantry, and the quest for Autarky through changes in agriculural policy. What is autarky you ask? It's the idea of a national economy that is completely self-sufficient, rather than being reliant on global trade. It seems ever more relevant then to read about Germany's goals of economic nationalism  in the current nationalist populist upsurge. As Tooze argues, the Nazi effort to stop relying so much on imported food was central to the ideology of lebensraum,  the ideology driving Nazi imperialism in Eastern Europe.  In short, if you are into reading long serious works of non-fiction, this book is an excellent corrective to popular representations of Nazi economic beliefs, which are too often described by people on the right as "socialist."

I also read quite a bit of Win McCormack's  Rajneesh Chronicles, a book collecting pieces originally published in Oregon Magazine during the rise and fall of Rajneeshpuram. I'm reading this book as part of this year's academic reading challenge, for task 9, "academic or journalistic book on the same subject as a documentary film." Since everyone has been talking about Wild, Wild Country, I just had to watch it, and am now learning even more by reading about the Rajneeshees. Without a doubt, this book has much more detail about the abuses of members of the cult than the film does. I can understand why ex-members of the Rajneesh movement have found fault with the documentary.


For today, it's back to Adam Tooze, starting the book's next section.

And for the daily challenge for bout of books, "Year of You" challenge, I choose Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five. I read this book in high school, during a time when I was on a Vonnegut-reading binge. I haven't read it since then, and only remember it now as a dread-filled and mind-blowing experience.

In the spirit of those dread-filled years, here's today's reading/listening song.


Thursday, May 10, 2018

Bout of Books May 2018

  Another week of reading and reading challenges is coming up with the next bout-of-books starting on May 14th. Every other time I've participated in this one, it's been the first week of classes for me, so it's not been very much of a reading week.  So this time, as I join the Bout of Books readathon, I'm looking forward to it - especially since I wanted to make May a big reading month for a long-term book project that I've had trouble making time for this year.

What is bout of books? Here's a description:

The Bout of Books read-a-thon is organized by Amanda Shofner and Kelly Rubidoux Apple. It is a week long read-a-thon that begins 12:01am Monday, May 14th and runs through Sunday, May 20th in whatever time zone you are in. Bout of Books is low-pressure. There are challenges, giveaways, and a grand prize, but all of these are completely optional. For all Bout of Books 22 information and updates, be sure to visit the Bout of Books blog. - From the Bout of Books team


I've got quite a serious TBR going right now, but I'm also in a book club, so I have some lighter things on the list as well.
  For my Academic Reading Challenge, I'm reading a biography of Graham Greene and Adam Tooze's Wages of Destruction, which is also for my book project. For book-club reading, I need to read Swamplandia, which I've owned for a long time without reading.  But in more serious reading, I have a large pile of recent books about neo-Nazis, right-wing populism, and the alt-right, and how to stop them, including David Neiwert's Alt America; Matthew Lyons, Insurgent Supremacists, and Shane Burley, Fascism Today: What it is and How to End It, Since the school year just ended and all my grades are turned in, I'm hoping to get a lot of reading done in the next two weeks.

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Dewey's 24 Hour Readathon Final Post

That was quick. This year for Dewey's 24 hour readathon, I read for 6 and a half hours and listened to an audiobook for 5 and a half hours - spending a total of 12 of the last 24 hours reading or listening to an audiobook.
Total pages in regular books: 230: Liz Fekete, Europe's Fault Lines 50; Mur Lafferty, Six Wakes 40; Norman Sherry, The Life of Graham Greene v. 1, 140. Audiobook finished: Drew Magary, the Hike.   This fits my usual slow reading speed of 30 -40 pages per hour.  The most daunting hour was  between 1:00 and 2:00 am. I slowed down a lot - falling asleep while reading Six Wakes despite late-night coca-cola and coffee ice-cream.

 While listening to the Hike, I lifted weights, walked for about 2 and 1/2 hours, went grocery shopping, washed dishes, and cooked dinner. During the 12 hours I wasn't reading or listening to an audiobook, I was attending a friend's afternoon party, talking to my husband, doing readathon related social media stuff, and finally, watching comedian Michelle Wolff's hilarious stand-up at the White House Correspondents' dinner.  I did more of the readathon "mini-challenges"  this time - but tried not to spend so much time on social media that I failed to use the time to read.

To answer the last couple of survey questions for the final hour, I am likely to do the readathon again. I don't know what really rad thing the readathon could do to make me smile - maybe do something to create a single place with a list of what everyone read, including some stats on the most popular books read during the readathon. I imagine this could be done through Goodreads, or a spreadsheet similar to what you create for the readathon when people sign up.

I'm very much enjoying Sherry's Greene biography, and am glad I chose it for this readathon. Greene's childhood reading habits were perfect readathon fodder, and this morning in my usual morning hour of reading, I finally got to the part of the book about Greene's friendship with Claud Cockburn and his early interest in spying in the 1920s.


Saturday, April 28, 2018

Dewey's Readathon Mixtape Mini-Challenge

It's almost as if Leah and 26 Letters was planning a theme for my blog today. This blog initially started as a place to store posts I'd made on Facebook about strange synchronicities between music and books, as I often listen to music while reading. 
 Anyway, this mini-challenge for Dewey's Readathon is to shuffle a music player, take the first song and match a book to it.  The first song that played on my usb drive in my car this afternoon was Thee Oh Sees, "The Axis"   It's a dark song with a pretty sound that ends in a chaotic and threatening sounding guitar solo. Looking over what I'd read recently, I decided the best book pairing for this song was Karolina Waclawiak's How to Get Into Twin Palms, a about a young Polish woman attracted to the trashy glamour of a Russian nightclub in her neighborhood in Los Angeles: Twin Palms.  The central character, like the guitar in the song's conclusion, makes a surprising decision, veering into chaos.

Dewey's 24 Hour Readathon Hour 12 - Mid Readathon post -

It's been kind of a strange one for me this time.  I spent a lot of time walking today, so listened to many hours of an audiobook, the Hike by Drew Magary, and am almost done. I read a little over 56 pages of the first volume of Norman Sherry's biography of Graham Greene, which is great for a readathon - Greene spent a lot of his childhood reading. Instead of going to school, he sometimes went to the bookshop, snuck home and then

would go cautiously to the croquet lawn where the summerhouse was that could be turned round so it faced away from house and school and there, sitting in a deck-chair, he would read all day, breaking only for lunch.

And then about 30 pages of Liz Fekete's new book on the European far right, Europe's Fault Lines. So to answer the questions, I have had a lot of interruptions, but they were my own. A friend was having a party, and I wanted to go, but she lives near a place where there is a large neighborhood festival so I didn't want to drive. Thus, I decided to walk there and back, using the opportunity to listen to the Hike, which I started a while back, but hadn't had time to finish.  For the second half, I'd like to finish Fekete. Her book is really sharp, and it is also quite short, but I probably will read more of the Greene bio because it's a bit more leisurely, and jump back into Mur Lafferty's Six Wakes, which I started reading late last night.

In honor of the reading & listening theme, I'm including this song from Helmet "Street Crab"  since The Hike includes a crab as a major character.  Trying not to be a spoiler.


Dewey's 24 Hour Readathon Opening Meme Post

Seems I only post here when there's a readathon going.  Here's my response to the Dewey 24 Hour readathon opening meme

1) Where: I'm reading in Atlanta. 
2) Which book in your stack are you most looking forward to? Hardest question. I really want to read Liz Fekete's book Europe's Fault Lines: Racism and the Rise of the Right but I also just finished most of a school year and might instead like to take a break from serious reading about politics for 24 hours. In that case, I'll probably divide my time between Six Wakes and the first volume of Norman Sherry's bio of Graham Greene, which is what I'm starting with. 
3) Which snack are you most looking forward to? hot Buffalo flavored pop-chips
4) About me: I'm a college professor and I run an annual academic reading challenge . Also, this blog is supposed to be about both music and reading, but I haven't done enough with it this year.
5) Do differently? This is my second time doing the readathon, and this year, I'm hoping to do more challenges than I did the first time, and hopefully go comment on other people's blogs. 

Friday, January 12, 2018

Bout of Books Days 2, 3 and 4


I've been reading away, but without time to blog regularly for BoutofBooks  This is the official start of the spring semester in the U. System of Georgia, so blogging and challenges had to wait. 

Day 2:
On Monday 1/9, we had an official day off from the state because of the big football game possible ice storm and an "abundance of caution." I spent the day reading the classic work on analytical reading by Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren, How to Read a Book. As my students noted, this book is very dated. It was first published in 1940, and its authors are notoriously Eurocentric. Nonetheless, the book still serves enough of a purpose that teachers still assign it, even to graduate students. I started assigning it because one of my students told me that she had read it after I commented on the noticeable improvement of her discussions of assigned reading in one of my classes. One of the things I like about this book is the way the authors describe the act of reading "There is the book, and here is your mind" - with a real affection for the cognitive acts involved in reading words on a page, for the relationship between book and reader as between student and teacher. It's hierarchical in some ways, as my students observed, but in the insistence that the reader learn to use only the tools of the mind on the book, rather than reaching for interpretive authorities to do it for him/her, it has a fundamentally democratic underlying principle.

Day 3:
On Wednesday, Jan 10th, to start the day I finished Dick Lehr and Michael Zuckoff's chilling and detailed Judgment Ridge. I'd had it on my shelf for a while, and used it to fill the Book Riot Read Harder challenge category for True Crime. I have a weird relationship with True Crime as a genre. I know it's lurid, voyeuristic and appeals to the worst morbid curiosity, and, as happened at the time that I picked up this book, I've often found it too compelling to resist reading. When I was in graduate school, I read several books by Anne Rule until I really couldn't stand her. Judgment Ridge, is a different sort of book from Rule's - more sociological than psychological, though the central premise in the end is that one of the killers is a sociopath.  To make sense of what seemed like a very senseless crime - two high school boys from a small town in Vermont randomly chose to go into the home of two Dartmouth professors and then brutally kill them - they describe the warmth and generosity of the victims, Half and Susanna Zantopp, who of course would welcome two high school boys into their home to help them conduct a survey on environmental issues. Most of all, they  describe the culture of small-town Vermont where the boys came from, in somewhat excruciating detail, as Goodreads reviewers have noted. Through these descriptions, we are supposed to understand the strange behavior of the boys (lazy, unaccountable, probably over-praised) and the community's failure to recognize the warning signs that two young murderers were on their way to a heinous act. The authors argue that Robert Tulloch was a sociopath who killed for pleasure and Jim Parker, who confessed in court, was the weak and insecure friend. The short version of the story is available in the New York Daily News, here. Cases like this one try my convictions as a prison abolitionist. From even a reform perspective, since they were very young when they committed the crime, they are people whose sentences should be much shorter than they are. At the same time, they had every advantage in life and, seemed to commit this crime out of sheer arrogance and lack of empathy. In a world without prisons and organized around different priorities, the hope is that instead of drawing praise and privilege, people like Robert Tulloch and Jim Parker would be subjects of much earlier intervention to stop them from victimizing others. The other thing that is notable in a case like this is that people are so mystified and shocked that young, white, middle-class boys would commit violent crime, since they are so "normal" and fit so many social ideals. The book does a good job revealing all the ways that our own "normal" ideals might have nurtured a sociopathic killer.

On Thursday, Jan 11th, I finished reading George Hawley's Right Wing Critics of American Conservatism. This book is a discussion of the ideological content of the US far right, written in a dispassionate style by someone who identifies as a conservative. It is interesting that those on the far right who are described in the book can be found across the internet describing it as a "liberal'or "left" book, when the author portrays the conservative movement as having been an effective check against the far right in the US, and can also be found blogging and contributing frequently to mainstream conservative publications. I found the book useful, even though the conclusion surprisingly underestimates the likelihood of increased popularity of white nationalism in the US, and dismisses the "manosphere" as a major force in politics.  I do agree with the author's assessment that libertarianism is the most likely large-scale conservative movement. Considering that the book was written in 2015, it makes sense that the author may have to revisit both positions in the wake of the 45th presidency and growth of the "alt-right." I look forward to reading his more recent book, Making Sense of the Alt-Right

Monday, January 8, 2018

Bout of Books 21 - Snow Days and School Days January 2018

 With all the booknerds, I'll be trying the bout of books for the second time. This challenge runs for this week.

Here's the explanation from the official gang at Bout of Books

The Bout of Books read-a-thon is organized by Amanda Shofner and Kelly @ Reading the Paranormal. It is a week long read-a-thon that begins 12:01am Monday, January 8th and runs through Sunday, January 14th in whatever time zone you are in. Bout of Books is low-pressure. There are challenges, giveaways, and a grand prize, but all of these are completely optional. For all Bout of Books 21 information and updates, be sure to visit the Bout of Books blog. 
What I like about these web-based reading challenges is that they get you into a kind of bookish frenzy with other readers to talk about the books you like, to answer some questions about your reading habits, and of course, to write about what you're reading on social media.

So...
It's been day one and as usual I was reading.
Today, my reading included:

Reading for research:  George Hawley,  Right Wing Critics of American Conservatism, which is an academic analysis of various trends on the far-right by a scholar who is a mainstream conservative. This makes it interesting as he takes divisions on the right much more seriously than most left writers do.

Reading for teaching: it's an old classic, Adler and Van Doren, How to Read a Book. I started assigning this to my introductory grad school theory class after a student told me it was helpful to her as she worked on interpreting theoretical works on her own for the first time.

and for the Book Riot Read Harder challenge of 2018, my chosen "book of true crime"  - Judgment Ridge: The True Story Behind the Dartmouth Murders. I had picked this book up a couple of years ago in a used bookstore. I don't know why, but I remembered those murders even though I didn't follow what happened later. I never knew anything about why they happened or who it was that actually did them, certainly not the trial. Reading the book is like entering the bad, dark reality that would be on the other side of the image of Stars Hollow on the Gilmore Girls. So far, it is not what the book represents, but it is a perfect study of how the presumption of innocence is a privilege specific to white middle-class people. Surely, these "normal boys" from "good families" in a small town could not be cold-blooded killers! Note: by saying this, I do not mean that the presumption of innocence is a bad thing, but that whiteness itself is so associated with innocence in our culture that it remains very difficult for people to associate white people with criminal activity, and the suggestion seems to be that there must be an extraordinary explanation for such crimes, in contrast to crimes committed by non-white people.